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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 16 page paper examines the increasingly significant problem of medical errors occuring in U.S. hospitals. This paper delves into the causes of these errors, which range from poorly devised systems, to economic issues and more. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
16 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSMederr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
paper. The student had asked that citations include a page number, which of course is not possible with electronic sources. The student should note however that in the
case of particular authors such as Leape and Berwick, this researcher accessed online sources of their positions regarding medical errors and thus included their viewpoints in this example paper.
Medical errors in the hospital setting are becoming a serious concern in general community. The number of medical errors is increasing and
with these errors often come devastating results. The fact is that many deaths and irreversible health effects have been associated with medical errors, and the problem is only worsening.
The reasons for these medical errors are many, ranging from inefficient systems, to overworked employees, to sheer accidents and many more. In the end, the fact remains that
unless knowledge is derived from these medical errors, then they will only continue to worsen. Therefore, understanding the current situation is fundamental toward producing solutions to mitigate this problem.
The knowledgeable health reporter for the Boston Globe, Betsy Lehman, died from an overdose during chemotherapy. Willie King had the
wrong leg amputated. Ben Kolb was eight years old when he died during "minor" surgery due to a drug mix-up. These horrific cases that make the headlines are just the
tip of the iceberg (To Err is Human: Executive Summary, 2004). The reality is
that errors are bound to occur in medicine (Rao and Agarwal, 2003). It is an imperfect science and certainly humans are inherently imperfect as well (Rao and Agarwal, 2003).
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